Writing Improvement help

I have always had very bad handwriting and would like to improve it, I have recently been told off at work about this again. Does anyone have any suggestions, I did bring this forward on a thread once before, but can not find it now.

The best advice I can give is ask a friend (who uses same side hand as you) who writes to do some handwriting in front of you and try copying their hand movements. Copying is how we learn to write, speak, walk etc. There might be a Youtube video too.

I never learned handwriting until I had too for signing documents.
It's better slow and correct than fast and wrong.
I'd did get a notebook and tried handwriting my name again and again til I was happy. Maybe something similar will help you?

I find a thicker pen helps cover up my appalling handwriting. I use an ink pen with a broad italic nib when I can, otherwise fibre tipped pens or .7mm Gel Pens - Pilot G2 are good.

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Thanks, I do use an ink pen with a broader nib rather than a ball point when I can. I will search further on the net and try and do this for an hour two each day. (Mind you it feels a bit like doing "Lines" from my school days!)

Just to add that practice makes permanence! I hadn't written anything down for almost a week prior to today, and then when I sat my exam, it looked like an inked-spider has been let loose on the paper at first. After a few minutes, it started to become legible again!

Print your letters, don't join up any letter pairs until you have had a lot of practice - it will make you speed up and reduce your quality.

Try drawing a row of letter sized circle on some line paper, try and get the circles round, the same size and the same spacing. If you find that a challenge then practice that for a few weeks, it will get your hand more used to delicate movements without you having to think about the letter forms - you can also practice this while doing something else.

Work at a desk with a chair at the right height and space for your arm to rest.

Don't use thick notebooks (especially small ones) - your muscles will tighten up if you need to lift your hand of the desk/paper to be able to write. Remember the muscles that control your fingers are located in your arm.

Print your letters, don't join up any letter pairs until you have had a lot of practice - it will make you speed up and reduce your quality.

Try drawing a row of letter sized circle on some line paper, try and get the circles round, the same size and the same spacing. If you find that a challenge then practice that for a few weeks, it will get your hand more used to delicate movements without you having to think about the letter forms - you can also practice this while doing something else.

Work at a desk with a chair at the right height and space for your arm to rest.

Don't use thick notebooks (especially small ones) - your muscles will tighten up if you need to lift your hand of the desk/paper to be able to write. Remember the muscles that control your fingers are located in your arm.